This is so good. It points to yet another casualty of ideological capture: the consequences of questions not allowed to be asked, studies not allowed to be done. In addition to the potentially alarming effects of T on female behavior, there are those liver tumors revealed (unintentionally) by the WPATH Files. What will the Endocrine Society have to say for itself?
This is so good. It points to yet another casualty of ideological capture: the consequences of questions not allowed to be asked, studies not allowed to be done. In addition to the potentially alarming effects of T on female behavior, there are those liver tumors revealed (unintentionally) by the WPATH Files. What will the Endocrine Society have to say for itself?
This is so good. It points to yet another casualty of ideological capture: the consequences of questions not allowed to be asked, studies not allowed to be done. In addition to the potentially alarming effects of T on female behavior, there are those liver tumors revealed (unintentionally) by the WPATH Files. What will the Endocrine Society have to say for itself?
Thank you, Jenny! That’s how I feel: intelligent, kind people can figure out a lot - if you let them, if you give them the information they need.
Dosing mentally ill females with psych meds and aggression juice is nightmarish. But as long as we can talk about it, we can figure this out.
I hate this policy of silence and obfuscation and hope it backfires.